Groups | Search | Server Info | Keyboard shortcuts | Login | Register [http] [https] [nntp] [nntps]


Groups > comp.lang.python > #9039 > unrolled thread

Re: Question- Getting Windows 64bits information Python 32bits

Started byRobert Kern <robert.kern@gmail.com>
First post2011-07-07 11:43 -0500
Last post2011-07-07 11:43 -0500
Articles 1 — 1 participant

Back to article view | Back to comp.lang.python

This discussion starts older than the indexed window; earlier articles aren't shown. The article labeled Started by below is the oldest one visible, not the original post.


Contents

  Re: Question- Getting Windows 64bits information Python 32bits Robert Kern <robert.kern@gmail.com> - 2011-07-07 11:43 -0500

#9039 — Re: Question- Getting Windows 64bits information Python 32bits

FromRobert Kern <robert.kern@gmail.com>
Date2011-07-07 11:43 -0500
SubjectRe: Question- Getting Windows 64bits information Python 32bits
Message-ID<mailman.751.1310057059.1164.python-list@python.org>
On 7/7/11 11:33 AM, Philip Reynolds wrote:
> On Thu, 07 Jul 2011, Andrew Berg wrote:
>
>> On 2011.07.07 10:21 AM, António Rocha wrote:
>>> I'm running Python (32b) in Windows7 (at 64bits) and I would like to
>>> know how can I check if my machine is a 32b or 64b in Python. Is it
>>> possible? I saw a few examples (like platform) but they only provide
>>> information about Python not the machine.
>> os.environ['processor_architecture']
>>
>> os.environ is a dictionary of system environment variables. That exact
>> key probably only exists on Windows, but I'm there is a similar key on
>> other platforms.
>
> $ python -c 'import platform; print platform.architecture()'
> ('64bit', 'ELF')
>
>    http://docs.python.org/library/platform.html

This is not what the OP is looking for. The OP wants to know what the CPU and OS 
are capable of, not what the Python executable is compiled for. 
platform.architecture() gives the latter.

-- 
Robert Kern

"I have come to believe that the whole world is an enigma, a harmless enigma
  that is made terrible by our own mad attempt to interpret it as though it had
  an underlying truth."
   -- Umberto Eco

[toc] | [standalone]


Back to top | Article view | comp.lang.python


csiph-web